Evaluating the role of the Health Bazaar Initiative on Sexual and Reproductive Health Service Utilization in Ethiopia: A Comparative Analysis of community- based interventions
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Background: Access to Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) services remains a significant public health challenge, particularly in rural and underserved areas. The Health Bazaar initiative was introduced as a community-based intervention to improve SRH service utilization and family planning uptake among reproductive-age women in Ethiopia. This study evaluates the effectiveness of the Health Bazaar model in improving access to SRH services, institutional delivery, antenatal care (ANC), postnatal care (PNC), and contraceptive utilization in intervention (Health Bazaar) compared to non-intervention areas (running SRH services in the routine health system). Methods: A comparative cross-sectional study was conducted in five Ethiopian regions where the Health Bazaar model was implemented. Data were collected from 1,284 reproductive-age women (15–49 years), equally distributed between intervention (n=642) and non-intervention (n=642) areas. Additionally, secondary data from the District Health Information System (DHIS2) (2018–2024) were analysed to assess trends in SRH service utilization. A multistage cluster sampling approach was used, and data were analysed using descriptive statistics, trend analysis, and multilevel mixed-effects logistic regression to identify factors associated with SRH service uptake. Results: The study found that SRH service utilization was significantly higher in intervention areas (65.1%) compared to non-intervention areas (47.6%) (p < 0.001). Contraceptive prevalence was also higher in intervention areas (53.3% vs. 41.8%, p = 0.001), with injectables (45.8%) and implants (44.5%) being the most commonly used methods. ANC service utilization was higher in intervention areas (87.3%) compared to non-intervention areas (77.1%), and institutional delivery rates were 89.4% in intervention areas compared to 80.6% in non-intervention areas. Trend analysis showed a greater increase in ANC (10.2 per quarter), institutional deliveries (5.8 per quarter), and PNC utilization (9.5 per quarter) in intervention areas compared to non-intervention areas. These differences remained statistically significant after adjusting for potential confounding factors, including age, marital status, education, household income, region, and participation in SRH-related discussions. Conclusion: The study findings demonstrate that the Health Bazaar intervention significantly improved SRH service utilization, family planning uptake, and maternal health service access in Ethiopia. The community-driven model holds potential for scaling up to further enhance SRH services in similar low-resource settings. Future interventions should focus on addressing remaining barriers such as awareness gaps, distance to health facilities, and socio-cultural influences to maximize impact.